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shortwavesurfer2009
465eb13404d7219cd91c2b4a8a7e308ad4e09bc1298dc08c5eec852e9bf5da09
#Monero using #libertarian who loves computer networking, distributed systems, privacy tech, and testing beta software. I may not be a pro, but I can file a mean bug report. Donate Monero (XMR): https://kuno.anne.media/fundraiser/zzn3/ Annual Expenses: 59 XMR 42WimCbGoy5SVZfkr5YdwtAg9jvpxFfNXfBjM2CJAUZC9JNAKZ34hF6a35HJNXWyw1ctxhSKp4MjfgR3uT8Eneq4GCwtqTs https://smp15.simplex.im/a#P99yLk0Wm9o1qks_M4uuf5cTqz8mua9QhyaByz2gIR8

Damn. Gas 8.5mXMR/gal. I want to say last time I looked that was like 13 and the time before that it was like 18.

#Monero

I think the biggest problem is that every brand supporting Linux phones is European and those devices don't work in my country because the band plan is different.

What mesh core interfaces are open source? Because the default one that everybody uses is not open source.

I know there are other programs that use it that are open source, but what interfaces are open source?

We are here to replace the state's monopoly on money and therefore the state's monopoly on violence and therefore the state itself.

If you depend on the state to determine value, you cannot replace the state.

As for the problem of volatility and whatnot, you can use simple moving averages to avoid this problem. If a farmer wants fiat for his cows and you want to sell his cows for Monero, the simple moving average can be used so that the farmer gets the fiat he wants and the Monero price stays stable.

To the people on #XMRBazaar who price items in Fiat:

May the Monero community reject your items and your storefronts fail for not pricing items in #Monero.

You can remain in the Fiat prison camp if you wish.

I use both nostr and lemmy.

I enjoy the Reddit style interface of Lemmy,

much more than the Twitter style interface of Nostr.

My guess is because I'm less interested in what individuals have to say and more interested in topics and the lemmy community model fits me better. On nostr you have hashtags, but they are just Twitter style posts with certain topics added to them.

I saw that you went with Linux Mint, and that is a freaking fantastic choice.

I've been using Linux since 2011 and I tried a bunch of different distributions. And what do I end up on? Linux Mint.

Is there one specific way for developing for Linux mobile? Because I know there's Ubuntu touch and there's some other ones like Postmarket OS and I don't know if they use the same app development frameworks.

This is the way. App developers, take notice

That's definitely why I thought it was worth posting. I'm not a Bitcoin person, but I thought that was very well done.

I am such a fucking lightweight. I wanted something to drink, so got a whiskey and Coke. And now I so feel like going to the land of Nod.

Gn all

nostr:npub1vzjukpr2vrxqg2m9q3a996gpzx8qktg82vnl9jlxp7a9yawnwxfsqnx9gc says America is a DINO (Democracy In Name Only)

Personally, i love nostr and lemmy. I think the biggest reason for it is because they default to chronological timelines, so I know when I have read everything that is new and don't have to doom scroll to attempt to learn what has been posted since I was last on. When I'm done, I know for a fact that I've seen everything that was new and responded to all the people who I wanted to respond to.

I don't remember what command it is right offhand, but I know there is a command you can run and specify Block 0 to the current block, and it will tell you exactly how many Monero have been minted since then.

They say they need that information to create a lightning wallet for you. I highly doubt that.

I see no reason you could not synchronize a #Monero node over #Reticulum both as an actual node and your wallets since the reticulum network can do 40 mbps

Sneed Mobile Tech got this wrong. It wasn't just #T-Mobile, and it wasn't due to #Starlink. It was geosynchronous satellites and airline communication data, such as the portals for the Gogo inflight Wi-Fi, etc.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=be9BhbR_aOk

Oh cool. Kind of interesting that they accept Monero, but not lightning. Then again, I can't really blame them for that.

It appears we may be getting a new role in #Meshtastic called CLIENT_BASE. It acts as a ROUTER for favorited nodes such as your personal T-Decks, T1000-E, MeshPocket, etc but acts as a standard CLIENT otherwise.

You would put the CLIENT_BASE node in your attic, on your flagpole, or on your roof and set your personal nodes as favorites. That way a weak 3rd party CLIENT with low SNR does not take priority over your much better positioned high node.

The OP in this github issue had a node on his house that wasn't getting utilized because another client in somebody else's house farther away was getting the signal weaker and rebroadcasting it first.

https://github.com/meshtastic/firmware/issues/7863

The main trade-off you will see would be shorter propagation distance.

In an urban environment, that's not going to matter that much. But in a rural setting, it might matter.

I don't plan on getting one now, but I seriously think this is going on my list of things to purchase. 578 mXMR.

https://shop.qrp-labs.com/qmxp

#AmateurRadio #HamRadio #Monero

For two devices communicating at ground level, you can expect a half mile to about a mile.

If you can get connected to a router, though, at some height, you can get a seriously good distance.

There's a guy in my local area who's 17 miles away who had his node 30 feet up on a pole and was communicating with our router 200 feet up on a tower from 17 and a half miles away.

I think the farthest achieved distance is over 300 km, mountain top to mountain top.

As far as bitrate goes, the default long fast is like 1.9 kbps and I think the short fast is like 10 kbps. There's a faster setting called Short Turbo, that's like 20K BPS, but it's not available in all regions due to legal restrictions, so I don't count it.

It does help bandspace availability. If you were on AM, it would be using both the upper and the lower side bands, so you'd only be able to do one thing at a time where, by using both upper and lower for separate things, two people could be on the same frequency and be using it for two different purposes without interfering with each other.

Mind you, the receiver has to be very accurate about being able to measure the side bands, otherwise you could have bleed over. I'm assuming the old tube radios would have problems with it versus today's crystal oscillators and such.

Long haul flights without Wi-Fi aren't going to exist for very much longer after the invention of Starlink.

Okay, I either don't have the SSL certificate enabled on my node, or it's not wanting to connect to a local IP address, or it might be because it's not connecting to the restricted RPC port on 18089. I'm not totally sure yet. The app will also need options for entering a SOCKS5 proxy so that you can use a Tor hidden service node, which is the way I primarily run my node.